INFORMATIONSVEREIN LENTIA, JÖRG HAIDER, AKTIONSGEMEINSCHAFT OFFENES RADIO (AGORA), WILHELM WEBER AND RADIO MELODY Ges.m.b.H. v. AUSTRIAPARTLY DISSENTING OPINION OF Sir Basil HALL
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Document date: September 9, 1992
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PARTLY DISSENTING OPINION OF Sir Basil HALL
I agree that there has been a violation of Article 10 in the case
of INFORMATIONSVEREIN LENTIA; but not quite for the reason given by the
majority of the Commission. My understanding is that the proposal of
the applicant association was that information of concern to residents
and shopkeepers in a residential development in Linz should be recorded
on video cassettes and transmitted to them through an internal cable
system. No use of air waves was to be involved. To my mind neither
the association nor its proposed activity can be regarded as a
"broadcasting enterprise" for the purposes of Article 10, and I cannot
see that the refusal of the Austrian authorities to allow the
establishment of the proposed system was necessary in a democratic
society, for any of the purposes stated in Article 10.
Having reached the conclusion that there has been a violation of
Article 10 in this particular case I do not need to examine whether
there is in addition a violation of Article 14 in conjunction with
Article 10.
With regret - and indeed with reluctance - I find myself unable
to agree with the majority of the Commission that there has been a
violation of the rights of the remaining applicants under Article 10
to freedom of expression.
Though considerable technical advances have been made the
question remains that the number of frequencies available for use for
the broadcasting which the applicants were contemplating remains
limited. Any licensing system which is set up has to provide for
competitive applications for licences from broadcasting enterprises.
Conditions will be prescribed to determine who is eligible for a
licence.
The applicants' complaints under Article 10 are not that they do
not have a right to broadcast, but that the system in force in Austria
is not in line with the requirements of that provision, in particular
because it does not provide for any licensing procedure for private
stations.
It is a matter of speculation whether the applicants would be
eligible to be considered for a licence in any licensing system that
might be introduced, and whether, if eligible, they would successfully
compete for licences. It is questionable therefore whether the effect
on them of the absence of a licensing system is sufficiently direct for
that absence to constitute a violation of their rights to freedom of
expression.
The majority of the Commission have concluded that there is now
an obligation on member States to set up licensing systems or the
equivalent, and that the Commission's earlier view, that Article 10
para. 1 third sentence could not be understood as excluding a system
of monopoly enterprises for radio and television, no longer has
validity.
That view was based in part on the fact that systems of
monopolies then existed in most member States. It is true that there
has since then been a great increase in the access of individuals and
organisation, in particular of commercial enterprises, to broadcasting
facilities. This has been achieved in various ways. A licensing of
private broadcasters is one. Another is the making of contractual
arrangements for the sake of air time to programme makers, who recoup
the cost by in turn selling space to advertisers. Yet another is by
conferring a right of reply. Though this is so, the situation remains
that in some states and in some regions, monopolies still exist.
The Convention must be applied against the background of existing
conditions, but it does not seem to me that the time has yet arrived
when it can be held that the right to freedom of expression given by
Article 10 requires member States to provide a system under which
individuals and organisations can apply for permission to establish
broadcasting stations, or that an individual or body can claim that
there has been a violation of Article 10 because such a system has not
been introduced.
The third applicant, AGORA, also complains of discrimination
against the Slovenian minority in Carinthia. Provision is however made
in programmes for that minority, and even if it were to be accepted
that the third applicant has the status to make this complaint, I do
not consider that the time allotted to the Slovenian minority is so
short as to amount to discriminatory treatment.
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